282 research outputs found
The Stellar Initial Mass Function in the Galactic Center
Massive stars define the upper limits of the star formation process, dominate
the energetics of their local environs, and significantly affect the chemical
evolution of galaxies. Their role in starburst galaxies and the early Universe
is likely to be important, but we still do not know the maximum mass that a
star can possess, i.e.``the upper mass cutoff.'' I will discuss results from a
program to measure the upper mass cutoff and IMF slope in the Galactic Center.
The results suggest that the IMF in the Galactic center may deviate
significantly from the Salpeter value, and that there may be an upper mass
cutoff to the initial mass function of 150 Msun.Comment: To be published in the IMF@50 conference proceeding
Massive Star Formation in the Galactic Center
The Galactic center is a hotbed of star formation activity, containing the
most massive star formation site and three of the most massive young star
clusters in the Galaxy. Given such a rich environment, it contains more stars
with initial masses above 100 \Msun than anywhere else in the Galaxy. This
review concerns the young stellar population in the Galactic center, as it
relates to massive star formation in the region. The sample includes stars in
the three massive stellar clusters, the population of younger stars in the
present sites of star formation, the stars surrounding the central black hole,
and the bulk of the stars in the field population. The fossil record in the
Galactic center suggests that the recently formed massive stars there are
present-day examples of similar populations that must have been formed through
star formation episodes stretching back to the time period when the Galaxy was
forming.Comment: Full resolution versions of the above images are available at
http://www.cis.rit.edu/~dffpci/private/papers/stsci06
A large-scale survey of X-ray filaments in the Galactic Centre
We present a catalogue of 17 filamentary X-ray features located within a
68\times34 arcmin^2 view centred on the Galactic Centre region from images
taken by Chandra. These features are described by their morphological and
spectral properties. Many of the X-ray features have non-thermal spectra that
are well fitted by an absorbed power law. Of the 17 features, we find six that
have not been previously detected, four of which are outside the immediate
20\times20 arcmin^2 area centred on the Galactic Centre. Seven of the 17
identified filaments have morphological and spectral properties expected for
pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) with X-ray luminosities of 5\times10^32 to 10^34 erg
s^-1 in the 2.0-10.0 keV band and photon indices in the range of \Gamma = 1.1
to 1.9. In one feature, we suggest the strong neutral Fe K\alpha emission line
to be a possible indicator for past activity of Sgr A*. For G359.942-0.03, a
particular filament of interest, we propose the model of a ram pressure
confined stellar wind bubble from a massive star to account for the morphology,
spectral shape and 6.7 keV He-like Fe emission detected. We also present a
piecewise spectral analysis on two features of interest, G0.13-0.11 and
G359.89-0.08, to further examine their physical interpretations. This analysis
favours the PWN scenario for these features.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Discovery of new Milky Way star cluster candidates in the 2MASS point source catalog III. Follow-up observations of cluster candidates in the Galactic Center region
This paper is part of a project to search the inner Milky Way for hidden
massive clusters and to address the question of whether our Galaxy still forms
clusters similar to the progenitors of the present-day globular clusters.
We report high angular resolution deep near-infrared imaging of 21 cluster
candidates selected from the catalogues of Bica et al. (2003) and Dutra et
al.(2003) in a region around the Galactic Center. These catalogues were created
from visual inspection of the 2MASS images. Seven objects appear to be genuine
clusters, and for these objects we present estimates of extinction, distance
and in some cases age and mass.
Our estimated masses range from 1200 to 5500 solar masses. These clusters are
thus significantly smaller than any Galactic globular cluster, and indicate
that the formation of massive young clusters such as Arches and Quintuplet is
not common in the present-day Milky Way.
The remaining 14 objects are either not clusters or cannot be classified
based on our data.Comment: 8 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in A&
H-Band Spectroscopic Classification of OB Stars
We present a new spectroscopic classification for OB stars based on H-band
(1.5 micron to 1.8 micron) observations of a sample of stars with optical
spectral types. Our initial sample of nine stars demonstrates that the
combination of He I 1.7002 micron and H Brackett series absorption can be used
to determine spectral types for stars between about O4 and B7 (to within about
+/- 2 sub-types). We find that the Brackett series exhibits luminosity effects
similar to the Balmer series for the B stars. This classification scheme will
be useful in studies of optically obscured high mass star forming regions. In
addition, we present spectra for the OB stars near 1.1 micron and 1.3 micron
which may be of use in analyzing their atmospheres and winds.Comment: Accepted by AJ, 16 pages Latex (aastex4.0) including 4 figures and 2
tables. A complete PostScript copy is available at
ftp://degobah.colorado.edu/pub/rblum/Hband
Mid-infrared imaging and spectroscopy of the enigmatic cocoon stars in the Quintuplet Cluster
In an attempt to determine the nature of the enigmatic cocoon stars in the
Quintuplet Cluster, we have obtained mid-infrared imaging and spectrophotometry
of the cluster, using the CAM and SWS instruments on ISO, using SpectroCam-10
on the Palomar 5m telescope, and NICMOS on HST. The spectra show smooth
continua with various dust and ice absorption features. These features are all
consistent with an interstellar origin, and there is no clear evidence for any
circumstellar contribution to these features. We find no spectral line or
feature that could elucidate the nature of these sources. Detailed modeling of
the silicate absorption features shows that they are best reproduced by the mu
Cep profile, which is typical of the interstellar medium, with tau(sil) \sim
2.9. The high spatial resolution mid-IR images show that three of the five
cocoon stars have spatially extended and asymmetric envelopes, with diameters
of \sim 20,000 AUs.
A reddening law similar to that of Lutz (1999) but with silicate features
based on the mu Cep profile and normalized to our value of tau(sil) is used to
deredden the observed spectrophotometry. The dereddened energy distributions
are characterised by temperatures of 750-925 K, somewhat cooler than determined
from near IR data alone. Models of optically thin and geometrically thick dust
shells, as used by Williams et al. (1987) for very dusty, late-type WC stars,
reproduce the observed SEDs from 4 to 17 mic, and imply shell luminosities of
log(L/L(sun)) \sim 4.5-4.9 for the brightest four components. An analysis of
the various suggestions proposed to explain the nature of the cocoon stars
reveals serious problems with all the hypotheses, and the nature of these
sources remains an enigma.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, A&A style. Accepted by A&
Near-infrared spectra of Galactic stellar clusters detected on Spitzer/GLIMPSE images
We present near-infrared spectroscopic observations of massive stars in three
stellar clusters located in the direction of the inner Galaxy. One of them, the
Quartet, is a new discovery while the other two were previously reported as
candidate clusters identified on mid-infrared Spitzer images (GLIMPSE20 and
GLIMPSE13). Using medium-resolution (R=900-1320) H and K spectroscopy, we
firmly establish the nature of the brightest stars in these clusters, yielding
new identifications of an early WC and two Ofpe/WN9 stars in the Quartet and an
early WC star in GLIMPSE20. We combine this information with the available
photometric measurements from 2MASS, to estimate cluster masses, ages, and
distances. The presence of several massive stars places the Quartet and
GLIMPSE20 among the small sample of known Galactic stellar clusters with masses
of a few 10^3 Msun, and ages from 3 to 8 Myr. We estimate a distance of about
3.5 kpc for Glimpse 20, and 6.0 kpc for Quartet. The large number of giant
stars identified in GLIMPSE13 indicates that it is another massive (~ 6500
Msun) cluster, but older, with an age between 30 and 100 Myr, at a distance of
about 3 kpc.Comment: aastex macro, 21 pages, 15 figures. ApJ, accepte
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